Categories
Economics

[2191] Of growth, recession and war

A random thought came to me.

War and recession have the same impact on the economic growth. Growth during wartime and during recession exhibit the same behavior. The same seems to be true for growth immediately after wartime and after recession. Relatively drastic changes happen during and after periods of war or recession.

If one looks at graph of growth without knowing history or context, one basically cannot tell the difference between wars and recessions. They are just dips which are unsuccessful in halting some long run growth trajectory.

Not so brilliant a realization, I will take that. But I am intrigued by it nonetheless.

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p/s — this may have been an overly strong statement. Relooking level of real GDP per capita from the 1860s to this decade, the Great Depression caused deep world economic decline while impacts of war appear relatively minuscule.

Categories
Economics

[2184] Of initial reaction to the New Economic Model

With over 200 pages, it will take some time to digest the so-called New Economic Model fully. I began by reading the speech delivered by the Prime Minister earlier today and I am only beginning to read the document proper just now. Given time constraint, I doubt I will able to able to go through the points presented comprehensively. At first past though, the NEM seems to suggest something favorable to me.

It appears to suggest the retreat of the state from the marketplace. The stress on frictions in the market due to subsidies and trade restrictions, the need of liberalization and reduction of government holding in some government linked enterprises are proofs for this. The term market is prominently used throughout the document.

There is more nuance than a simple retreat however. The speech itself suggests that entities like Khazanah and EPF will be allowed to invest abroad as part of effort to not crowd out the private sector.

That is good but it does not erase the fact that these entities still exist.

Affirmative action itself is still in force although the PM suggests that it will be reformed from race-based to need-based. Somewhere in the speech, the term market-friendly affirmative action appeared. I am not quite bought by that term. I rather hear the abolition of affirmative action but I am willing to give ground that need-based is far better than race based affirmative action.

The existence of national key performance indicators itself suggests a huge bureaucracy. It has been taunted as part of government transformation but I am not at all impressed with the idea of enlarged bureaucracy. Nevertheless, I am willing to give the administration a benefit of a doubt on this front.

Never mind the administration seeks to strengthen the public sector. How that strengthening will affect the size of the bureaucracy is something I hope to find out while reading the report.

Categories
Economics Politics & government

[2183] Of opposition to reforms

Malaysia requires multiple reforms. Development in recent years proves that moving away from the status quo is incredibly hard, however. This is due to opposition mounted by beneficiaries of the current system, as well as beneficiaries of circumstances.

As the Najib administration puts in effort to address criticism directed against the flawed affirmative action, it faces fierce opposition from its own base in UMNO. There are at least two proofs to back this assertion.

First, while Perkasa is officially independent, the majority of Perkasa members ”are ordinary UMNO members”, as reported by The Nut Graph. Secondly, the editorial of Utusan Malaysia, which traditionally has been a very eager promoter of UMNO, supports Perkasa openly. Perkasa is an unrelenting critic of liberalization with respect to the affirmative action.

Perkasa and its allies fear the dumping of the current affirmative action. They are inside and they are loud. The internal opposition has already forced the Najib administration to postpone the announcement of the so-called New Economic Model several times now. How much eventual reform will occur on this particular front is suspect after deputy minister and a prominent UMNO member Mukhriz Mahathir said the new policy would have the spirit of the old New Economic Policy.

The preceding federal government also faced opposition from the inside, with respect to its effort to ensure judicious use of police power. The Independent Police Complaints and Misconduct Commission (IPCMC) proposal did not go through.

While the Abdullah administration then was already treading the path of the tattered, it still enjoyed huge majority in the House. Yet, there was no political will to deal with the police force decisively. The Enforcement Agency Integrity Commission was instead born, but critics say it is an ersatz to the IPCMC.
The Abdullah administration is now gone partly due to resurgent democratic culture in Malaysia, among other things. It is crucial to capitalize on the resurgence to seal the future of a more democratic Malaysia.

The reinstatement of local election is one way to institutionalize democratic culture. Unfortunately, standing in the path of further democratization is the Najib administration. Given the prime minister’s exhortation of the need for Malaysia to change, it is utterly disappointing to have him to prefer the undemocratic status quo.

Regardless of the outcome of all three cases, outside forces, which more often than not come in form of Pakatan Rakyat, have been crucial in pushing the case for both. Unfortunately, a warning is in order. While it can be helpful, outside force, i.e. Pakatan Rakyat, is no less influential in affecting reforms adversely.

Take the liberalization of the fuel subsidy regime under the Abdullah administration, for instance. The subsidy regime has proven to be disastrous to government finance. Massive expenditure dedicated to it sapped and is sapping resources that can be better used for other more productive purposes.

Yet, Pakatan Rakyat opposed such liberalization. In riding populist sentiment, Anwar Ibrahim even announced that he would cut fuel prices and, in effect, increase subsidy if he was in power at a time when global crude oil prices were going through the roof.

Fortunately, the restructuring of the fuel subsidy went through. Fortunately, partly because the populist path would have brought great damage to the economy in the long run. The reform is not complete yet but at least, it is moving along. What is of note is that the Abdullah administration only managed to push through the liberalization after suffering huge political cost.

Another example involves the proposed goods and services tax (GST) pushed by the Najib administration. The GST modernizes the tax system by addressing tax evasion committed by free riders who want every benefit but refuse to pay for it, or rather have others to pay for them.

There is considerable apprehension against the GST, especially when it is pushed by a government that does not have a stellar reputation in fiscal discipline and is perceived as corrupt. Yet, that in no way negates the need to reform the way government collects revenue because the solutions to all these concerns on government size and corruption are not mutually exclusive issues. They can be solved together.

Yet, Pakatan Rakyat is developing into a party of ”no”. It states that while GST is a good concept, it still opposes it due to a number of reasons. Lim Guan Eng, in an anti-GST forum, said that GST would tax everybody and painted the idea that not everybody is paying consumption tax at the moment. He backed his statement by erroneously comparing the fact of a narrow tax base relevant to income tax to the tax base of a consumption tax, which is a completely different animal.

Furthermore, quite conveniently, he was pretty much silent on two points that do not fit his narrative. First, the existence of a consumption tax in form of sales and services tax; all of us face prices after that tax at the moment, and that in effect says that everybody pays consumption tax.

Second is that the GST is to replace that consumption tax at a lower standardized rate with possible replication of existing tax exemptions, making the GST potentially not inflationary. The Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs has made a stronger claim that the GST at the proposed rate is disinflationary.

Another argument against the GST from Pakatan Rakyat revolves around wealth inequality of Malaysia. But if the GST is not inflationary, then it should not affect inequality; if it is disinflationary, then it should have an equalizing effect on wealth inequality.

Whatever the effect of GST on price levels, the truth is that the GST system can be tweaked to satisfy a lot of concerns. Income tax rates can be lowered if there is concern about excessive burden. Rebates can be designed for some purpose. Exemptions can be made. Really, discussions on how to make GST better or more palatable than its current form need to take place. That it is not happening, though. Instead, Pakatan Rakyat is giving a solid no and prefers to ride on anti-tax sentiments. That is, in effect, a preference for the status quo.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

First published in The Malaysian Insider on March 25 2010.

Categories
Economics

[2176] Of Lim Guan Eng probably does not know that everybody pays SST

Opponents of the introduction of goods and services tax (GST) in Malaysia have raised a number of points.

Some of the points are valid even if they are disagreeable. Sometimes, the disagreement is ideological and difference is due to premises originating from separate irreconcilable positions. Those points are fine because at least they are logical and honest.

Some, like opposition to GST based on regressiveness, are plainly illogical and wrong however. Some are pure bullshit of gargantuan magnitude, i.e. if the tax rate is 4% and there are four points within a value chain, the total tax rate paid by the end consumer is 16%. One made by Lim Guan Eng at an anti-GST forum some weeks ago is disingenuously irrelevant.

Mr. Lim stated that under GST, everybody will be taxed.[0] It is true that everybody, in a sense that any anybody who consumes a particular taxed good regardless of income levels, will be taxed. But this line of argument presumes that everybody has not already been taxed.

Unfortunately for Mr. Lim, consumers in Malaysia have already been taxed through a consumption tax that is theoretically as flat and as regressive as GST. That tax is the sales and services tax (SST).

Because of the untrue presumption, his argument is irrelevant.

Why is the argument irrelevant?

To evaluate the worth of his argument, a comparison between GST and status quo scenarios has to be made.

Why?

Remember, the proposal is to replace SST with GST. The desirability of one option has to be defined in terms of the desirability of the other and vice versa. In other words, ask the question, “why one option is better than the other?” Absolute statement does not help in decision-making. Relative statement does.

Further, for Mr. Lim’s — and increasingly what is becoming one of Pakatan Rakyat’s as well as others parrot the argument without thinking — argument to be relevant, the status quo must consist of a scenario where not everybody is being taxed. There is no such status quo: the status quo has SST in place.

What is the point of arguing as Mr. Lim has done so when everybody has already been taxed — in fact, taxed at a higher rate? Remember, the current GST  is planned to be introduced at 4% while the current SST rate ranges from 5% to 10% and there are goods taxed at even 20%.[1]

Both SST which is currently in place, and GST, will affect everybody. If one opposes GST on the basis of how GST affects everybody, then the person has to oppose SST too. Therefore, that person should be indifferent between having GST and SST. One simply cannot make sense if one bases one’s opposition on how GST will affect everybody.

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[0] — Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng said with the old sales and services tax system, only some 1.5 million of the total of 12 million workers are taxed but its replacement with the GST will mean everyone, including poor workers, will be affected. [Pakatan bets on GST to muscle BN out. The Malaysian Insider. February 29 2010]

[1] — See Sales Tax. Accessed December 3 2009.

Categories
Economics

[2172] Of did we need the stimulus package?

The fourth quarter of 2009 saw Malaysian economy recorded strong recovery on year-on-year basis.[1] So strong it was that the monetary authority of Malaysia went for a rate hike, making Malaysia the second country after Australia to adopt a hawkish monetary policy.[2] The question that should be asked now is, did we need the big stimulus?

The question is particularly relevant because the main driver of recovery has been external demand. This is something I have been stressing from the very beginning and it is the thrust of my opposition to economic stimulus, especially in the fashion of fiscal expansion, given the effect of the expansion on fiscal deficit, effect on future taxpayers as well as its potential adverse effect on private borrowers and therefore the economy sans the public sector.

Growth for external demand for domestic goods almost doubled the growth of domestic demand for goods.[3][4] Add the fact that external demand makes up a very large part of Malaysian GDP, in fact approximately 100% in terms of exports-to-GDP ratio,[5] the stimulus seems unnecessary.

Without the stimulus, recovery might have been less impressive than what was registered recently; it would be a recovery nonetheless. This however assumes that the government spending has no affect on interest rate and thus, the exchange rate. This is possible if the monetary authority, which is the Bank Negara, colludes with the executive branch of the government.

But expansion of fiscal policy does affect interest rate and the exchange rate assuming independence of the monetary authority, at least within the typical IS-LM model under open economy.

With that model with that particular settings, recovery without stimulus could have been just as impressive. If the extraordinary fiscal expansion were absent — the factor inhibiting exports that is higher exchange rate due to fiscal expansion would be absent — external demand for domestic goods could have increased much more than the already impressive level we saw at the end of 2009.

Remember, a lot of people were pleasantly surprised by the fourth quarter growth.

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[1] — Malaysia’s economy expanded 4.5 percent in the final three months of 2009 from a year earlier, Prime Minister Najib Razak said yesterday. Economists expected a 3.2 percent expansion, a Bloomberg survey showed. Gross domestic product fell in the preceding three quarters as exports slumped amid the global financial crisis. [Malaysia May Beat Korea, India to Asia Rate Increase. David Yong. Bloomberg. February 25 2010]

[2] — March 3 (Bloomberg) — Malaysia may be the next Asian country to pull back monetary stimulus as its recovery strengthens, moving to raise borrowing costs or reduce excess cash in the economy ahead of neighboring Indonesia. [Malaysia May Pull Monetary Stimulus Before Indonesia . Shamim. David Yong. Bloomberg. March 3 2010]

[3] — The external sector performed favourably with both Exports and Imports turned over by 7.3 per cent and 6.9 per cent respectively. The improved demand for the products of Electrical & Electronics, Animal & Vegetables Oils & Fats and Chemicals have contributed to the increase in Exports. Meanwhile, the growth in Imports was due to the higher demand for intermediate goods and capital goods. [National Product and Expenditure Accounts Fourth Quarter 2009. Department of Statistics of Malaysia. February 24 2010]

[4] — Malaysia’s real GDP, population 29,992,577 in 2008 according to the World Bank, grew 4.5% compared to the same period one year ago. The impetus behind headline number was domestic demand (GDP minus net exports), +3.9% Y/Y and external demand (exports), +7,3%. [A tale of two recoveries: Malaysia vs. Germany. Rebecca Wilder. News N Economics. February 25 2010]

[5] — See trade profile of Malaysia at World Trade Organization. Accessed March 5 2010.